Why Pakistan Is Watching Imran Khan’s Sons Like It Once Watched Benazir Bhutto | World News

New Delhi: When the power is robbed, who carries Alevi? The question is echoed in the political view of Pakistan. Behind the stone walls and iron bars of the Adiala prison in Rawalpindi, an old prime minister (Imran Khan) at a time when a wave was brewed outside. The Call of Resistance came up by the party (Pakistan Tehreek-e-insaf). This time, the murmurs grow loudly to step forward.
In drawing rooms and in digital areas, people talk about two young men living away from the heat of Pakistan politics, and their faces are known more than the podiums. Qasim and Suleman, the sons of Khan.
For years, they have stayed both geographically and politically. England shaped their training. The world of their mothers shaped their privacy. Even if their fathers hold the highest office in the earth, their names never touch the political headings. But something changed.
Over the last few weeks, voices close to them show that two brothers want to be seen and heard now. They talked, gave interviews and questioned why their father was cut from them. Some of them first said they planned to travel to the United States. There, they hope to talk about the rights that return home. From there they plan to come to Pakistan.
The expectation is growing.
Those who are close to the family say that their arrival is a moment of emotional power for movement. Their existence believes that in the absence of their leaders, confused and scattered supporters will confuse something in the ranks. They talk about a new energy, something still. They say that supporters will gain new courage from the opinion of their leaders as they walk with their leaders.
The government began to give warnings on its behalf. The ruling persons said that the brothers could be arrested if they participate in any protest within the country. Only this signal sent fluctuations with the opposition circles. Some ask why their sons can’t fight for their father. Others ask whether their passports will allow the entrance and whether the airport will have too many limits.
People around the political circles say it is intimidated, nothing else. Still, the threat is real.
Some believe that even from abroad, brothers can play a role. They can talk in places where others are silenced. They can reach policy makers who will not call from Pakistani politicians. The effect belongs to a world where she wears suits, not the Shalwar Kameez. And Pakistan has a surname echoing along the streets and courtrooms.
The whispering is not about whether they will go in anymore. They are about how far they will go.
What is at their father’s party is talking about a new movement that will start in August. They say the sons are ready to enter the storm. The former Prime Minister’s sister stood at the gates of Adiala, who already challenged. Now, the eyes turn to the sons. Some say this moment is always coming. This family comes into play when institutions fail.
Observer says that protests can only be successful if people rise every day – once and not in short, as a pulse that does not fade. A political storm cannot come and go like rain. Should linger.
Parallels are drawn against Pakistan. Former Prime Minister Benazir Butto’s father said that when he was taken, he walked this path. Maryam Nawaz’s father remembered that he built his brick brick after falling. A fire from political inheritance speaks as a duty, not as a right.
In the drawing rooms in Islamabad, they ask whether history has been rewritten. They ask whether your sons will come in the villages in Punjab. In the United Kingdom, policy observers are wondering that the symbol of the jack will now step into the blood sport of politics.
There is no clear answer yet. Only speculation and just waiting.
But something for sure. The story of Pakistan’s dynasties is far from ending. And a long delayed section can finally begin with the sons of a leader who has been imprisoned in the shadow of his father.



